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Andy Revkin
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Sustain What?
Resurrect George Washington to Defy Wannabe King Trump a Third Term?
File this post in the “sustainability of democracy” track.I just had an unplanned pop-up Sustain What conversation with the wide-ranging author Paul Greenberg about his bitingly satirical novella, A Third Term, and hope you take time for a listen. (I’ve known Paul for decades through his invaluable writing on fish and conservation.)His new work of fiction, in which George Washington is resurrected to confront a current-day president, “The Tyrant,” is a wild ride that is just the sort of prod we all need at the moment. Here’s a summary from Paul that doesn’t...
2025-06-30
36 min
Sustain What?
A Day for Showing Your Climate Stripes, and Trying Other Ways to Make Data Matter
Today is #ShowYourStripesDay, aiming to sustain the push initiated years ago by UK climate scientist Ed Hawkins to use cool and warm colors to depict long-term climate change in ways that might grab attention and ultimately change choices and behavior.I’ve explored this innovation and related ones for a long time, most notably in a Sustain What webcast on Show Your Stripes Day in 2021. I’ve reposted that episode in Substack’s player above.As you will learn (or already know if you watched it way back when), there’s still scant behavior...
2025-06-21
56 min
Sustain What?
Meet Kate Marvel, the NASA Climate Scientist Who's Written a "Biography of Earth in Nine Emotions"
Here’s my Sustain What conversation with Kate Marvel, a prominent climate scientist and communicator whose first book, Human Nature - Nine Ways to Feel About Our Changing Planet, is a bracing and deeply personal tour of climate science, planetary history and the array of hopeful and/or heartbreaking environmental futures ahead, depending on choices made or avoided now.Thank you, Matt Burgess and cliff Krolick, for being among subscribers who watched live on Substack. Please subscribe to catch future episodes and share this post.Marvel and I explored the book’s nine chapters, and feel...
2025-06-20
55 min
Sustain What?
A Visual Tour of American Character(s)
Given how Trumpism seems deadset on squeezing the dizzying diversity out of the United States, it seemed a great time to reach out to Peter Guttman, a world-roaming photographer who’s spent decades portraying the full prismatic wonder and weirdness of us.Please watch and/or share this conversation here or on Facebook, LinkedIn, X (at my handle @revkin) or YouTube.Here’s a snippet focused on one of the grassroots voices pushing for Juneteenth as a national holiday - LaVerne Ross of the Calvary Baptist Church in Santa Monica, California. As Guttman writ...
2025-06-19
54 min
Sustain What?
From Communities to Corporations - How to Cut Vulnerabilities that Turn Hazards into Disasters
When I was building my sustainability communication project at Columbia University, I was recruited to be an author of a chapter on “communicating risk for decision-making” in what would become the 2022 Global Assessment Report from the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction. I couldn’t participate fully in the end (boring reasons) but gained a valuable view of the depth and breadth of expertise brought together by these periodic reports. Explore some of the results here:The pandemic, which exploded as the writing process played out, vividly illustrated how all the communication advice in the world comes...
2025-05-27
31 min
Sustain What?
A Poet and a Picker Explore Everything from Romania's Election to How Steve Martin Learned Banjo
Whenever you need a break from the dueling pundits, have a listen to one of my Sunday Sanity shows. For those who missed us live on Sunday, here’s an audio and video antidote for Trump’s lock on our brains - a conversation, poetry reading and picking party with a couple of remarkably creative humans - the provocateur poet Andrei Codrescu, who you may have heard as a frequent NPR commentator in decades past, and masterful bluegrass and trad musician John McEuen, best known for his 50 years in the legendary Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and for help...
2025-05-19
53 min
Sustain What?
Trump's Whiplash Effect on a U.S. Weather Data Pipeline
Update June 3 | In another demonstration of the Trump administration’s reckless and damaging whiplash approach to funding of vital programs, the initial freeze on this vital conduit for weather data has been reversed. But note that the Unidata blog post below includes this line about sustained threats to funding:This positive development allows us to end the current furlough of our staff and resume our operations. While we are grateful to receive our next increment of funding, we are mindful of the challenges that lie ahead with our continued funding given the administration’s proposed FY26 budget that...
2025-05-09
20 min
Sustain What?
A Teaching Framework Helping Students (or Others!) Tackle Complex Challenges With Impact in Mind
Here’s the video and podcast version of my Sustain What conversation with two Maine-based educators and a superstar student taking on tough problems in their communities that have links to the wider world. Learn all the background in my “curtain raiser” post:We were joined for a bit by Radhika Iyengar, a colleague of mine during my time at Columbia University. She’s working on an online course with Jeff Sachs on the Ages of Globalization.There were wonderful comment contributions and questions from viewers around the Web, particularly this one from John Eppler on Faceb...
2025-05-01
1h 04
Sustain What?
Facing Trump Attacks, a Funding Implosion and Too Much More, Here's What Journalism is For - and How to Sustain it
Here’s the curtain raiser post with all the relevant links related to Jon Allsop’s new book, What is Journalism For?, and Karen Bordeleau’s New Bedford Light newsroom, which made national waves with its vivid coverage of an atrocious abuse of force by immigration officers in New Bedford several days ago. Here are two illuminating moments:Jon Allsop on how an “emergency mode” for journalism facing the autocratic attacks from President Trump is out of date now that he’s settled into the White House:A look at the New Bedford Light covera...
2025-04-16
1h 10
Sustain What?
Yes, Climate and Democracy Progress is Possible Despite Trump's Demolition Derby
This is my first stab at a Substack Live video - done by adding Substack to my Streamyard livestream tool. Here’s the curtain-raiser post with lots of context:Sustain What is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit revkin.substack.com/subscribe
2025-04-11
53 min
Sustain What?
"We Shall Not Be Moved"
Here’s the podcast post of my virtual Sustain What meetup with a batch of folks out in the Hands Off protests against the Trump and Musk approach to “governing.” I was also joined by a longtime reader, Josette, from New Hampshire, who used to work in telecommunications at Perkins Coie, one of the law firms that Trump has attacked. We discussed this bit of good news from Friday (here from Reuters):More than 500 law firms have signed a court brief denouncing Donald Trump's targeting of Perkins Coie and other firms, expressing alarm over the Republican president's intens...
2025-04-05
39 min
Sustain What?
Assessing the Dangerous Trump / Musk Effect on Aviation and Highway Safety
“Elon Musk can declare, properly, every Starship explosion as a step forward because you have to try lots of things until you see what works. You can't do that with commercial airlines.” - James Fallows Here’s the webcast / podcast version of my Sustain What transportation conversation with longtime journalists James Fallows, David Kerley and Jim Motavalli. All the details and relevant links are in the “curtain raiser”:Sustain What is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Fallows we...
2025-03-04
55 min
Sustain What?
Essential Insights from a Top Climate Researcher Who Warns Against "Climatism"
I hope you heard (or now watch) my 2021 conversation with the Cambridge University climate researcher Mike Hulme and science and propaganda historian Naomi Oreskes on trust and mistrust in climate science. The same goes for our 2023 conversation about his latest book, Climate Change Isn’t Everything, which describes what he calls “climatism” - a tendency in climate-policy discussions to put CO2 reduction in the foreground no matter what the issue is. I’ve loaded it above and here we are on YouTube:If you really want to dive in, explore my New York Times articles drawing...
2025-02-15
57 min
Sustain What?
With U.S. Aid for Lifesaving Overseas Programs Still a Tangle, "People are Dying"
Here's today’s Sustain What discussion with two journalists from Global Press, an international newsroom supporting female reporters in the world’s most troubled regions. Global Press immediately began widespread reporting on the realtime impacts of the initial USAID freeze and persistent chaos around money flowing to public health and other vital programs from Nepal to Uganda. (I apologize for some audio echo but you can scan the rough transcript as well.)The editor-in-chief, Krista Karch, and Nakisanze Segawa, reporter-in-residence in Kampala, Uganda, offered disturbing descriptions of specific perils created by the Trump administration’s aggressive moves.“...
2025-02-13
42 min
Sustain What?
Amid the Worst Surge Toward Autocracy in a Century, Here's How U-Turns Toward Democracy Can Happen
Here’s the podcast version of my Sustain What conversation with three authors of a sobering, and yet slightly hopeful, paper identifying a rising number of autocracies that are followed by a sharp social and political u-turn to democratization. A rough dynamic transcript is here. The paper is here:The hopeful part of the open-access study is this:The analysis presents a systematic empirical overview of patterns and developments of U-Turns [from autocracy toward democracy between 1900 and 2023]. A key finding is that 52% of all autocratization episodes become U-Turns, which increases to 73% when focusing on the la...
2025-02-11
1h 03
Sustain What?
Music for Trump Time - 🎶 Save Dreams for Sleeping, It's Time to Get Real
Here’s a fresh tune for these times from my songwriting side, which has been energized since I signed on to a two-decade-old annual project called February Album Writing Month (FAWM.org). There’s more below about this remarkable effort - aimed at getting participants to write 14 songs in 28 days (yes, FOURTEEN!) - including a video explainer by its founder, Burr Settles, a machine learning researcher focused on language learning at DuoLingo and, of course, on music. I hope to interview him soon.My new song, Save Dreams for Sleeping, is still in beta mode. I’ve been t...
2025-02-07
02 min
Sustain What?
Caught in the Trump & Musk Flood Zone? Narrative Analyst Randy Olson Has Some Advice
I’ll wager that most of you have already heard or read Ezra Klein’s powerful audio “Don’t Believe Him” manifesto examining Trump’s take on Steve Bannon’s longstanding “flood the zone” strategy designed to overwhelm media and institutional capacity to convey and challenge his unfolding demolition derby presidency.If not, here’s the captivating opening. But it’s vital to get past the initial statement about Bannon’s strategy.In his piece, Klein notes Trump is already getting caught up in his own flood tides, with initial overreaching steps already facing legal setbacks and more resist...
2025-02-06
40 min
Sustain What?
Wealth Management with Human and Planetary Progress in Mind
Here’s the podcast / webcast version of my talk with Tom Kalil, who’s moved from advising two presidents on science and technology policy to building Renaissance Philanthropy, a consultancy for wealthy people who want to help fill funding and capacity gaps to help science serve society and sustainability.We talked about that work and also about the challenges and some possibilities as the second Trump presidential term gets into gear.Here’s the curtain raiser with lots of relevant links:Sustain What is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and suppor...
2025-02-04
57 min
Sustain What?
Michael Liebreich on How A.I. Giants Can Help (or Hurt) the Grid and the Prospect of Sensible Discourse with Trump's Energy Secretary
This is the podcast version of the Sustain What discussion I just had with the relentless clean-energy optimist, investor and evangelist Michael Liebreich. Key sections are on the need to switch metrics for success from kilowatt/hours to energy services; the ethics of focusing decarbonization on the most carbonized nations; the potential for energy-hungry AI giants to help United States regions revive wider grid reliability and clean-energy sourcing; and the possibility of having constructive conversations on sustainable energy abundance with the soon-to-be Trump Energy Secretary Chris Wright.Here’s the curtain-raiser post with all the background!...
2025-01-22
1h 32
Sustain What?
Clarifying Methane Sources and Solutions
Here’s the video and audio podcast of my #SustainWhat show offering a valuable update on trends in emissions of heat-trapping methane and emerging science showing the tropics are the dominant driver of the recent rise in the flows of this potent greenhouse gas. Listen and share and weigh in. Background on my guests along with a batch of relevant links are in the “curtain raiser” post below.Here are some additional sources we touched on in the conversation that weren’t in my initial post:* Human activities now fuel two-thirds of global methane emissions (Global C...
2024-12-06
1h 02
Sustain What?
What I've Learned and Unlearned in 40 Years of Climate Reporting
This new talk is the latest iteration of what I’ve learned and unlearned through 40 years of reporting and conversation wrangling around the intertwined challenges of building a safer human relationship with the climate system and with energy. My focus, echoing my goals in these dispatches, was conveying how to get beyond amorphous labels like sustainability and climate emergency by asking productive questions, starting with “Sustain what?” Watch or listen above and share this post, or watch and share on YouTube:I gave the talk for the Jay Heritage Center, a nonprofit group on a h...
2024-11-23
47 min
Sustain What?
How do You Stay Sane in Such Turbulent Times? For Me, One Path is Still Music
Take a mental break and do tell me how you stay sane and centered given the turbulence of this political and societal moment and the tough path ahead?For me - along with our dogs, cooking, carpentry, hikes and the like - there’s always music. (Read my post explainng that side of my life if you haven’t already.)This new song of mine, “After the Roaming,” was inspired by a melody composed by fellow student Kathy O'Rourke during our current songwriting workshop at Bagaduce Music in Blue Hill, Maine. (We were each tasked by the t...
2024-11-03
02 min
Sustain What?
Live from Trump's Hate-Filled Madison Square Garden Rally
UPDATED 10/28 9 am - As I’ve written before, no real progress on the issues I explore here on Sustain What is possible without sustaining democracy and moving past racism and hate, so I had to cover tonight’s hate-filled Trump “rally.”As Donald Trump’s Madison Square Garden event was getting into gear on Sunday afternoon, I reached out to Marshall Curry, an Academy-Award winning film director.I was hoping to interview him because in 2017 he made a stunning seven-minute documentary called “A Night at the Garden” built with rediscovered film footage of the February 1939 rally at the v...
2024-10-28
19 min
Sustain What?
What to Think - and do - About "Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters"
This is the podcast version of my Sustain What show on an illuminating Washington Post story on issues and insights around the newsmaking and much-cited “billion-dollar weather and climate disasters” assessments by NOAA - the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.I’ve been deeply impressed with Harry Stevens’ reporting on climate at the Washington Post in his Climate Lab columns. He’s outdone himself with a big new analysis of the insights and issues around the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s much-covered tally of “billion dollar weather and climate disasters” from extreme climate events. Gift link: http://wapo.st/3...
2024-10-24
1h 18
Sustain What?
Dissecting the "Scale Monster" Stalking the Energy Transition
Here’s the podcast version of my “Watchwords” conversation with Mekala Krishnan, the lead author of a recent McKinsey Global Institute report, “The hard stuff: Navigating the physical realities of the energy transition.” I use the term watchwords to highlight terms or phrases that too often confuse more than clarify.We were joined halfway through by Jessica Lovering, the co-founder and exective director of Good Energy Collective, which has a its mission “building the progressive case for nuclear energy as an essential part of the broader climate change agenda and working to align the clean energy space with environ...
2024-10-22
59 min
Sustain What?
How Appalachian Geography Amped Up Helene's Flood Impact - and How this Relates to California's watery future
First, here’s my freshly updated post offering a heap of ways anyone anywhere can help the organizations and volunteers working nonstop around Hurricane Helene devastation zones:Second, here’s a shoutout to the professional and volunteer first responders doing highly dangerous work seeking and rescuing survivors. Several are among the more than 215 victims so far. The North Carolina National Guard has been working nonstop.Finally, please watch or listen to my Sustain What conversation seeking lessons from the catastrophic inland flooding triggered when Hurricane Helene's remnants collided with the Appalachian Mountains. My guest is Davi...
2024-10-04
28 min
Sustain What?
As Trump Floods All Zones With Fakery, It's Vital to Spread Propaganda Literacy
Updated February 2025 - Given what’s unfolding under Trump 2.0, I thought it worth highlighting a Sustain What conversation I had in December 2020 with University of Rhode Island communications professor Renee Hobbs, who teaches propaganda literacy and is the author of a fantastic guide book, Mind Over Media: Propaganda Education in a Digital Age. She has built a priceless suite of online learning tools to explore and share.I’ll be holding an onstage conversation with Hobbs at the Bioneers Conference in Berkeley, Calif., on March 28. Come meet us in person!She provides a fantastic overview of t...
2024-09-15
58 min
Sustain What?
A Brazil-Eye View of a Supreme Court Justice's Shutdown of Musk's X
Update, 6:30 pm Brazil time, Aug. 31 - X flickered to life just a few minutes after I posted this, at least from my Rio hotel - just long enough for me to tweet afresh. But now it’s spinning and frozen again. So back to Threads and Bluesky for the moment.On the final morning of a hectic three-city visit to Brazil to brainstorm with journalists, students and scientists on next steps for climate communication, Twitter ground to a halt as an order by a Supreme Court judge here took effect. The imposed hiatus was refreshing in...
2024-08-31
36 min
Sustain What?
When it Comes to Climate and Sustainable Progress, What's Art Got to Do it?
My Sustain What webcast project started early in the pandemic and quickly evolved into having several tracks - one being regular Monday sessions I centered on pathways to Thriving Online. Here’s one of my favorites - a chat with two very different artists using drawing to communicate consequential environmental science and policy choices (also on YouTube):Karen Romano Young (@doodlebugKRY), a seasoned science illustrator, has spent months at sea (follow her #AntarcticLog) with a focus on Antarctic science. She's also a childrens' book illustrator and author. Explore her work here.Pat Bagley, a prize-winning po...
2024-08-07
1h 01
Sustain What?
Pathways to Crosstalk, and Impact, in Perilously Polarized Times
There are paths to cooperation and respect amid deep difference, and - in person or online - there are strategies that can move conversations either in a constructive or destructive direction. Elected and community leaders have a rhetorical choice to make every day facing that reality. That’s true even for bullet-grazed Trump.As I tweeted yesterday, the momentous shooting in Pennsylvania can lead to “either a tipping point toward true unraveling or a pinch point that can be navigated if Trump's team chooses moderacy over feeding its already-committed base.”Is this a tipping point or nav...
2024-07-15
1h 22
Sustain What?
Where and Why Tornado Risk is Growing as Climate - and Communities - Change
Here’s a key point I made in today’s pop-up webcast: Think of Tornado Alley as a syndrome, not a place. And it isn’t what, and where, it used to be.In 2018, longtime tornado researchers Victor Gensini of Northern Illinois University and Harold Brooks of NOAA’s National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Okla., completed widely-covered research showing a substantial shift in the particular meteorological conditions that are most apt to generate tornadoes (and a shift in tornado reports). Media coverage, then and since, has tended to zoom in on the hot ques...
2024-06-20
18 min
Sustain What?
Testing the "Unsettled" Climate-Science Assertions of Steve Koonin
I hope you’ll watch and weigh in on this Sustain What episode testing the arguments against climate alarm of Steven Koonin, a former chief scientist at BP and former Obama-era Energy Department science undersecretary who is the author of the best-selling book Unsettled – What Climate Science Tells Us, What it Doesn’t, and Why it Matters. An updated edition was eleased on June 11th.You can also watch and share the conversation on YouTube, X/Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn.Koonin, who’s joining the Hoover Institution this fall as a senior fellow, has a new op-e...
2024-06-11
1h 16
Sustain What?
A Potent Film, Checkpoint Zoo, Provides an Animal's Eye-View of an Inhuman Invasion
War is hell. No headline there.But imagine war expierenced through the eyes and ears of lions, chimpanzees, camels and other creatures in a wildlife park in northeastern Ukraine, and experienced by their keepers and a ragtag crew of volunteers who rushed to evacuate them as Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion played out in 2022.That is what you’ll experience when the documentary “Checkpoint Zoo” gets into theaters or streaming sites after its premiere at the Tribeca Festival. I hope the film gets wide distribution.“Checkpoint Zoo” tells the story of Feldman Ecopark, a sprawling...
2024-06-06
33 min
Sustain What?
Meet a Top Guide to Hurricanes and Climate Change as a Hot Atlantic Storm Season Begins
June 1 is the official start of hurricane season in the Atlantic, Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. To stay safe along coasts or in floodable inland areas as the season heats up, you should of course bookmark NOAA’s National Hurricane Center tracking and warning site. Don’t get too used to the storm-free image on the site at the moment:To stay sane as the media environment around hurricanes and climate change heats up, you should bookmark NOAA’s Global Warming and Hurricanes page, curated for many years by senior scientist Tom Knutson.Knutson is one of...
2024-06-01
41 min
Sustain What?
Moving from "Waste Not" Aphorisms to Action - One Town and Product at a Time
I just had a solutions-focused waste-cutting Sustain What chat with two marvelous guides - Edward Humes, the Pulitzer-winning author of Total Garbage - How We Can Fix Our Waste and Heal Our World (following up on his 2012 book Garbology - Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash); and Sarah K. Nichols, who’s driven some of the most significant innovations in state policy around waste reduction and now works for an innovative beverage container recycling company called Clynk. There’s more about Clynk below.Watch and share on YouTube, LinkedIn, X/Twitter and Facebook.To rece...
2024-04-09
48 min
Sustain What?
One Path to Traction for People Paralyzed by the Climate "Scale Monster"
I’ve spent a lot of time assessing ways to defeat what I call the “complexity monster” impeding climate and energy solutions. Here’s a Sustain What webcast on a fresh approach, including building a big welcome table instead of walls. Also watch and share on Facebook, X/Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn. (Here’s a rough Trint transcript.)I was intrigued to learn about an upcoming set of live seminars offering ways to stay cool, connected and effective amid the nonstop turbulence around and within our fossil-fuel-heated climate system. The workshop, called “Embracing our Emergency,” is being led later this spr...
2024-03-29
1h 04
Sustain What?
Amazon Career Track? Confessed Assassin, 1990, Rising Local Right-Wing Leader 2024
📺 🎧 This is the podcast episode for the post below on a consequential scoop by a Brazilian environmental journalist revealing how the confessed murderer of an environmental hero in the western corner of the Amazon River basin 35 years ago quietly rose to regional influence under a religious nickname 1,500 miles to the east. My guests are:* Cristiane Prizibisczki, the O Eco journalist who broke the story* Angélica Mendes, Chico Mendes’s granddaughter, who has a biology Ph.D. and is president of Comitê Chico MendesWhy should anyone outside of the region pay attention to the ree...
2024-03-09
52 min
Sustain What?
Hannah Ritchie Bravely Offers Up Data Amid a Maelstrom of Climate and Sustainability Assertions
I hope you'll watch, share and weigh in on this invaluable Sustain What conversation I just had with Hannah Ritchie , the lead researcher at Our World in Data and author of the Not the End of the World, an invaluable book offering a data-based foundation for discussion and action on the full span of sustainability challenges and choices, from stemming warming to spurring human advancement where the need is deepest.She’s getting an enormous amount of justified attention, including a TED Talk and a podcast session with Bill Gates (who also is a big financial supporter of...
2024-03-04
59 min
Sustain What?
How Imagery Can Spur Clean-Energy Progress
Through most of my journalism career, I presumed that more information leads to better choices. As media moved online, I experimented ever more with conveying what I was reporting or learning using far more than the written word. When I went to the North Pole in 2003, I brought back video that captured the unnerving dynamics and sounds of floating, drifting sea ice far better than words could. At climate negotiations in 2005 in Montreal, I tried out podcasting, recording the passionate voices of youth activists as a way to get beyond the gray-suited wonkiness of these sessions. I...
2024-02-25
42 min
Sustain What?
A Growing Antarctic Fishery for Tiny Krill Could Reverse the Recovery of Great Whales
I recently ran a fascinating Sustain What webcast on one of those tangled questions that are all too common in this globalizing world of consumption and extraction: how to manage growing harvests of massive blooms of the crustaceans called krill that are also fodder for reviving populations of great whales (among other wildlife).Listen above and share this post or do the same on Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn and X/Twitter to engage wider audiences. Also explore the rough transcript above if you can’t listen.Krill, extraordinarily abundant in waters around Antarctica, are rich in om...
2024-01-22
58 min
Sustain What?
A Song and Mission for Years Like These
Please share this post - more than you might share others. INSERT - Join me with a batch of wonderful guests in a special pop-up live musical gathering Monday, January 1, New Year’s Day, at noon US Eastern time! Join on YouTube here:Also streaming on Facebook, LinkedIn and X/Twitter (no advance link in X; just join us at @revkin at showtime).~ ~Another year down, full of extreme heat and turmoil, success and peril - both climatic and societal. And the year ahead could make this year seem boring. ...
2023-12-30
02 min
Sustain What?
An Anthropocene Check-in with an Eco-Focused Actor, a Poet and a Good News Blogger
I hope you’ll watch or listen to this wonderful Sustain What conversation on ways to navigate, and improve, this moment on Earth increasingly called the Anthropocene - the Earth as shaped by human activities, for worse or better. Some here will recall I played a role in the evolution of this concept thanks to a line in my 1992 book on global warming. See my essay about that at the bottom of this post.My guests are the longtime actor and environmmental activist Ed Begley, Jr.; Sam Matey, the writer of the refreshing Substack newsletter Th...
2023-12-14
59 min
Sustain What?
How Technology and Ingenuity Enabled a Giant Squid Quest
My latest Sustain What conversation is a bit off the typical themes I’ve focused on since the early days of the pandemic. Our topic was innovations and lessons surrounding a giant-squid hunt. Watch and you’ll meet Nathan Robinson, a marine biologist and science communicator I got to know at a Global Exploration Summit we both spoke at last summer and his research collaborator and mentor Edie Widder, whose research focus has long been on bioluminescence.Widder has built a lauded science and conservation career blending neuroscience, technology and keen observational skills. See her three TED talk...
2023-12-02
53 min
Sustain What?
A Gripping New Film Charts a Death-Defying Scientist's Half Century Quest to Study and Save High-Mountain Ice
For half a century, Lonnie Thompson and Ellen Mosley-Thompson, an extraordinary husband-and-wife science team at Ohio State’s Byrd Polar Research Center, have been documenting both the decline of mountain glaciers in and around the tropics and the climate history locked in cylinders of ice they’ve extracted from such frozen libraries before they vanish.Now two filmmakers, Danny O’Malley and Alex Rivest, have produced an enthralling documentary, Canary, that chronicles this couple’s edge-pushing and literally death-defying efforts. O’Malley is best known for his work on the long-running Chef’s Table series on Netflix and Rivest r...
2023-09-10
55 min
Sustain What?
Why it's Not Too Late for Climate - and What to Do
I hope you’ll give a listen to this dose of grounded climate and development optimism from three wonderful contributors to the new essay collection and online project called Not Too Late - Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possiblity.I’m still trying to gauge who among you wants audio podcasts. Please let me know through my feedback form!My guests were:* the best-selling author and activist Rebecca Solnit* the University of Maine paleoecologist and masterful communicator Jacquelyn Gill* the Clark University climate geographer and IPCC...
2023-04-19
1h 20
Sustain What?
Amid Brazilian turmoil, revisit my exploration of the legacy of Amazon forest defender Chico Mendes with radio legend Studs Terkel
As thousands of propaganda-inflamed supporters of Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro violently invaded the top offices of government in Brasilia today, I couldn’t help thinking back to the four months I spent in Brazil in 1989, the year the nation was in the midst of its first direct presidential elections since 1960. It was heartening to track reports tonight that this insurrectionist tide had been turned back by police. But no one who cares about democracy, Indigenous rights or environmental protection should rest easy. Most of my time in Brazil 34 years ago was spent roaming the...
2023-01-09
55 min
Macro Hive Conversations With Bilal Hafeez
Andrew Revkin on What to Do About Climate Risk
Andrew Revkin is one of America’s most honoured and experienced environmental journalists and the founding director of the new Initiative on Communication and Sustainability at Columbia University's Earth Institute. He’s written on climate change for more than 35 years, reporting from the North Pole to the White House, the Amazon rain forest to the Vatican - mostly for The New York Times. He has held positions at National Geographic and Discover Magazine. He’s written books on the dawn of Earth's Anthropocene age, the history of humanity’s relationship with weather and climate, the changing Arctic, global warming and the a...
2023-01-06
1h 34
Sustain What?
Podcast - How to Use Twitter Without Being Abused by it Even as Elon Musk Roils Online Discourse
For audio podcast fansThis is the audio of a webinar I just held for Columbia Climate School colleagues eager to sift for strategies making the most of online connectivity amid epic shifts, including Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover. My internal work here at Columbia is focused on building science and policy communication pathways that are about more than clicks. The slides are posted here.My earlier post has the rough transcript (also on Trint here), with links to relevant info added: This is a public episode. If you'd like to...
2022-12-03
59 min
Sustain What?
Message to Musk: The Side of Twitter That Can Save Lives in Weather Emergencies Also Makes Money
Yesterday I hosted a Columbia Climate School Sustain What conversation exploring what Elon Musk’s tumultuous takeover of Twitter means for the platform’s capacity to save lives in emergencies like extreme storms, floods, wildfires and other environmental emergencies.My featured guest was Jim Moffitt (@snowman), who worked in developer relations at Twitter for eight years building the capacity for the platform’s vast trove of real-time data - generated through the flow of thousands of tweets a second around the world - to be harnessed by companies, journalists, researchers or government agencies through its APIs - applic...
2022-11-22
1h 01
Sustain What?
Sustain What Podcast👂🏼- For Population Impact, Pay Less Attention to 8 Billion and more to 1.3 Billion (15-24-year olds)
This is the audio version of my Columbia Climate School Sustain What discussion of the world beyond 8 billion - focused on what factors in play today will determine the quality and quantity of human lives and the environment in the decades to come. Read the text post here: As the Human Population Tops 8 Billion, a Look Beyond Bomb📈 and Crash 📉 Panic Proclamations.Sift a rough transcript on Trint. If you become a financial supporter, you can help me hire an assistant to help with some of the production work.The conversation center...
2022-11-15
1h 14
Sustain What?
A Climate Prankster, a Mayhem Funder and Sociologists Debate the Role of In-Your-Face Activism
As the latest wave of food-tossing, media-seeking climate emergency protests began, I pulled together a spirited Sustain What discussion featuring the executive director of the Climate Emergency Fund, which is pouring millions of dollars into edge-pushing protest networks, a longtime performance activist and two sociologists deeply researching when activism does and doesn’t matter. My guests were the activism-focused sociologist Dana Fisher (@fisher_danar) of the University of Maryland along with the sociologist Robb Willer (@robbwiller) of Stanford University (an author of an important paper on the “activist’s dilemma”) and Margaret Klein Salamon (@climatepsych), executive director of the C...
2022-10-28
1h 06
Sustain What?
Avoiding Climate Disaster: A Discussion with Noam Chomsky, Belinda Archibong, Jeff Schlegelmilch
Original Air Date: October 27, 2021 Drawing on insights from his book Climate Crisis and the Global Green New Deal, our featured guest, Professor Noam Chomsky, will explore paths to climate progress on an overheating and starkly unequal planet with fresh assessments from Columbia Climate School's Jeff Schlegelmilch, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness and Dr. Belinda Archibong, a Barnard College economist focused on African development and perspectives on climate and energy policy. The session will be hosted by longtime climate journalist Andy Revkin, the founding director of the Initiative on Communication & Sustainability of the Columbia...
2021-10-31
1h 30
Sustain What?
Avoiding Climate Disaster: A Discussion with Noam Chomsky, Belinda Archibong, Jeff Schlegelmilch
Original Air Date: October 27, 2021Drawing on insights from his book Climate Crisis and the Global Green New Deal, our featured guest, Professor Noam Chomsky, will explore paths to climate progress on an overheating and starkly unequal planet with fresh assessments from Columbia Climate School's Jeff Schlegelmilch, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness and Dr. Belinda Archibong, a Barnard College economist focused on African development and perspectives on climate and energy policy. The session will be hosted by longtime climate journalist Andy Revkin, the founding director of the Initiative on Communication & Sustainability of the Columbia...
2021-10-31
1h 30
Sustain What?
Paths to Progress Facing Enduring Deep Uncertainty
Original Air Date: November 11, 2020 DESCRIPTION: Too often, politicians and the rest of us choose to wait for clarity before tackling tough, consequential, challenges. News media cover disastrous events far better than underlying drivers of risk - or resilience. To seek solutions, join Andy Revkin’s Earth Institute Sustain What brainstorm with participants in this year’s annual conference of the Society for Decision Making Under Deep Uncertainty – a community focused on making the most out of inconveniently murky reality. We’ll examine how to assess and communicate effective policies and practices in the context...
2021-10-15
1h 09
Sustain What?
Paths to Progress Facing Enduring Deep Uncertainty
Original Air Date: November 11, 2020DESCRIPTION: Too often, politicians and the rest of us choose to wait for clarity before tackling tough, consequential, challenges. News media cover disastrous events far better than underlying drivers of risk - or resilience.To seek solutions, join Andy Revkin’s Earth Institute Sustain What brainstorm with participants in this year’s annual conference of the Society for Decision Making Under Deep Uncertainty – a community focused on making the most out of inconveniently murky reality.We’ll examine how to assess and communicate effective policies...
2021-10-15
1h 09
Sustain What?
Sustain What: As Vaccines Flow, What’s Needed to Break the Pandemic Pipeline?
Original Air Date: December 11, 2020 DESCRIPTION: With COVID-19 vaccines beginning to flow, many global-risk experts worry nations may lose track of the grander challenge: acting systemically, and systematically, to curb pandemic risk on a hyper-connected planet. Join Sustain What host Andy Revkin in a solution-focused brainstorm with psychiatrist and sustainability scholar Jonathan Salk, who co-wrote “A New Reality - Human Evolution for a Sustainable Future” with his father, the famed vaccine pioneer and humanitarian Jonas Salk; Tara O’Toole, an epidemiologist, biomedical and intelligence technologist at the intelligence-focused venture firm In-Q-Tel; and Roman Krznaric, a philosopher who wr...
2021-10-15
1h 02
Sustain What?
Sustain What: As Vaccines Flow, What’s Needed to Break the Pandemic Pipeline?
Original Air Date: December 11, 2020DESCRIPTION: With COVID-19 vaccines beginning to flow, many global-risk experts worry nations may lose track of the grander challenge: acting systemically, and systematically, to curb pandemic risk on a hyper-connected planet.Join Sustain What host Andy Revkin in a solution-focused brainstorm with psychiatrist and sustainability scholar Jonathan Salk, who co-wrote “A New Reality - Human Evolution for a Sustainable Future” with his father, the famed vaccine pioneer and humanitarian Jonas Salk; Tara O’Toole, an epidemiologist, biomedical and intelligence technologist at the intelligence-focused venture firm In-Q-Tel; and Roman Krznar...
2021-10-15
1h 02
Sustain What?
Andrew Revkin in Conversation with Kate Raworth and Roman Krznaric Entre Nous
What decisions can we make today as individuals and societies to create a better tomorrow? Join Columbia Climate School's Andrew Revkin, economist Kate Raworth, and philosopher Roman Krznaric for a conversation on how reinventing economics and incorporating long-term thinking into our current policies can help us meet the challenges of climate breakdown and global inequality, and transform our world for future generations. Speakers: Roman Krznaric is a public philosopher who writes about the power of ideas to change society. His latest book is The Good Ancestor: How to Think Long Term in a...
2021-10-15
1h 11
Sustain What?
In Conversation with Renegade Economist Kate Raworth and Future-focused Philosopher Roman Krznaric
What decisions can we make today as individuals and societies to create a better tomorrow?Join Columbia Climate School's Andrew Revkin, economist Kate Raworth, and philosopher Roman Krznaric for a conversation on how reinventing economics and incorporating long-term thinking into our current policies can help us meet the challenges of climate breakdown and global inequality, and transform our world for future generations.Speakers:Roman Krznaric is a public philosopher who writes about the power of ideas to change society. His latest book is The Good Ancestor: How to Think Long...
2021-10-15
1h 11
Sustain What?
Sustain What: How Many Billions Can a Heating, Pandemic-Wrapped Planet Support?
October 7, 2020On Fridays, the Sustain What webcast of Columbia University's Earth Institute dives behind headlines and hashtags with leading journalists and experts to offer insights on what's really afoot. A great panel is coming together to discuss this week's truly extraordinary developments, in which a president infected with the novel virus driving the COVID-19 pandemic checked out of a military hospital tweeting, "Don't be afraid of Covid. Don't let it dominate your life." This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get...
2021-09-27
1h 16
Sustain What?
Sustain What: How Many Billions Can a Heating, Pandemic-Wrapped Planet Support?
October 7, 2020 On Fridays, the Sustain What webcast of Columbia University's Earth Institute dives behind headlines and hashtags with leading journalists and experts to offer insights on what's really afoot. A great panel is coming together to discuss this week's truly extraordinary developments, in which a president infected with the novel virus driving the COVID-19 pandemic checked out of a military hospital tweeting, "Don't be afraid of Covid. Don't let it dominate your life."
2021-09-27
1h 16
Sustain What?
Hope and Sensemaking in a Pandemic? A "Futuring" Conversation with Thomas Homer-Dixon & More
October 2, 2020 Thomas Homer-Dixon, the bestselling author of The Upside of Down and other books exploring pathways through complexity, joins Sustain What host Andy Revkin and two special guests in a bracing discussion of the themes of his latest work: "Commanding Hope: The Power We Have to Renew a World in Peril." (https://commandinghope.com/) The guests are: - Susan Cox-Smith, a partner and futurist at Changeist, a consultancy and training organization that curates and creates "experiences that stretch strategic thinking, materialize the new, and connect with people about what comes next." She's a...
2021-09-27
1h 11
Sustain What?
Hope and Sensemaking in a Pandemic? A "Futuring" Conversation with Thomas Homer-Dixon & More
October 2, 2020Thomas Homer-Dixon, the bestselling author of The Upside of Down and other books exploring pathways through complexity, joins Sustain What host Andy Revkin and two special guests in a bracing discussion of the themes of his latest work: "Commanding Hope: The Power We Have to Renew a World in Peril." (https://commandinghope.com/)The guests are:- Susan Cox-Smith, a partner and futurist at Changeist, a consultancy and training organization that curates and creates "experiences that stretch strategic thinking, materialize the new, and connect with people about...
2021-09-27
1h 11
Sustain What?
Overwhelmed by COVID-19, Climate and More? Slow Down and Stretch Your Time Scales
A pandemic and attendant economic crisis rock the world along with political and social turmoil intensified by an overheating information environment and overheating climate. What's a solution-oriented human being to do? Slow down and stretch your time scales, according to three experienced analysts of this extraordinary moment in human history. Join the Earth Institute’s Andy Revkin, the philosopher Roman Krznaric, the journalist and resilience expert Bina Venkataraman and the filmmaker John D. Sutter in a discussion of ways to find meaning by stepping back from the urgency of now.
2021-09-22
1h 04
Sustain What?
Overwhelmed by COVID-19, Climate and More? Slow Down and Stretch Your Time Scales
A pandemic and attendant economic crisis rock the world along with political and social turmoil intensified by an overheating information environment and overheating climate. What's a solution-oriented human being to do? Slow down and stretch your time scales, according to three experienced analysts of this extraordinary moment in human history. Join the Earth Institute’s Andy Revkin, the philosopher Roman Krznaric, the journalist and resilience expert Bina Venkataraman and the filmmaker John D. Sutter in a discussion of ways to find meaning by stepping back from the urgency of now. Krznaric's new book is...
2021-09-22
1h 04
Sustain What?
The Pandemic was Predicted - So What?
In this webcast, former senior intelligence and national security officers explore headlines noting that intelligence reports provided to the Trump White House had laid out the likelihood of a pandemic with unnerving clarity - and one even noted worrisome signs of a rapidly spreading virus in Wuhan in November (ABC: https://bit.ly/covid19wuhanintell) But the challenge for this or any administration is not awareness as much as prioritization, as former National Intelligence Council analyst Rod Schoonover put it in a previous Sustain What conversation: “In my world in the intelligence community, I was of...
2021-09-21
1h 31
Sustain What?
The Pandemic was Predicted - So What?
In this webcast, former senior intelligence and national security officers explore headlines noting that intelligence reports provided to the Trump White House had laid out the likelihood of a pandemic with unnerving clarity - and one even noted worrisome signs of a rapidly spreading virus in Wuhan in November (ABC: https://bit.ly/covid19wuhanintell)But the challenge for this or any administration is not awareness as much as prioritization, as former National Intelligence Council analyst Rod Schoonover put it in a previous Sustain What conversation:“In my world in the in...
2021-09-21
1h 31
Sustain What?
Risks and Choices as Populations Surge in Flood Zones, Rich and Poor
Air Date: August 6, 2021DESCRIPTION: In this special live Sustain What webcast, join host Andy Revkin of the Columbia Climate School and http://revkin.bulletin.com in a brisk solution-focused discussion with top experts of pathways to risk reduction in the world’s hundreds of crowding deluge danger zones.Humans are profoundly heating the climate and changing storm patterns through a surge in emissions of heat-trapping gases and other pollution. But there’s also been a simultaneous surge of settlement in zones prone to flooding -- producing what some geographers call an “...
2021-08-15
1h 15
Sustain What?
Risks and Choices as Populations Surge in Flood Zones, Rich and Poor
Air Date: August 6, 2021 DESCRIPTION: In this special live Sustain What webcast, join host Andy Revkin of the Columbia Climate School and http://revkin.bulletin.com in a brisk solution-focused discussion with top experts of pathways to risk reduction in the world’s hundreds of crowding deluge danger zones. Humans are profoundly heating the climate and changing storm patterns through a surge in emissions of heat-trapping gases and other pollution. But there’s also been a simultaneous surge of settlement in zones prone to flooding -- producing what some geographers call an “expanding bull’s eye” of...
2021-08-15
1h 15
Sustain What?
Pathways to Impact in Perilously Polarized Times
Aired: June 2, 2021A special Sustain What episode with two scientists, a journalist and a songwriter offering ways to navigate turbulence, polarization and disinformation with the fewest regrets.Join Andy Revkin of Columbia’s Climate School with Carnegie Mellon philosopher Andy Norman; solution-focused journalist Amanda Ripley; Columbia University psychologist and conflict dissector Peter Coleman, and songwriter and storyteller Reggie Harris.Send feedback and ideas for future shows:http://j.mp/sustainwhatfeedbackHere's more on our guests:- Peter T. Co...
2021-08-15
1h 26
Sustain What?
Pathways to Impact in Perilously Polarized Times
Aired: June 2, 2021 A special Sustain What episode with two scientists, a journalist and a songwriter offering ways to navigate turbulence, polarization and disinformation with the fewest regrets. Join Andy Revkin of Columbia’s Climate School with Carnegie Mellon philosopher Andy Norman; solution-focused journalist Amanda Ripley; Columbia University psychologist and conflict dissector Peter Coleman, and songwriter and storyteller Reggie Harris. Send feedback and ideas for future shows: http://j.mp/sustainwhatfeedback Here's more on our guests: - Peter T. Coleman, a professor of psychology and education at Columbia University, wi...
2021-08-15
1h 26
Sustain What?
‘Ministry for the Future’ Author Kim Stanley Robinson Meets Inheritors of Our Climate Future
Air Date: December 23, 2020 Earlier this year, the famed climate-focused novelist Kim Stanley Robinson told Columbia students: “I’ve been pushing myself to write utopian narratives; that gets weirder as we continue on the course that we’re on." In this special intergenerational Sustain What conversation, Robinson returns to Columbia (virtually this time) to explore the themes in his sweltering, jarring new novel “Ministry for the Future” with the Earth Institute’s Andy Revkin and several advocates for the future – including the 15-year-old climate change campaigner Alexandria Villaseñor and Carolyn Raffensperger, a lawyer who was an early le...
2021-07-26
1h 06
Sustain What?
‘Ministry for the Future’ Author Kim Stanley Robinson Meets Inheritors of Our Climate Future
Air Date: December 23, 2020Earlier this year, the famed climate-focused novelist Kim Stanley Robinson told Columbia students: “I’ve been pushing myself to write utopian narratives; that gets weirder as we continue on the course that we’re on."In this special intergenerational Sustain What conversation, Robinson returns to Columbia (virtually this time) to explore the themes in his sweltering, jarring new novel “Ministry for the Future” with the Earth Institute’s Andy Revkin and several advocates for the future – including the 15-year-old climate change campaigner Alexandria Villaseñor and Carolyn Raffensperger...
2021-07-26
1h 06
Sustain What?
Herman Daly and Kate Raworth on Pandemic-Resistant Economies
In my 400-plus Sustain What conversations, several stand out, includng this intergenerational discussion of economic models that can fit on a finite planet. I invited Herman E. Daly, a founding force behind “steady-state economics,” to examine possible paths to less fragile global systems with Kate Raworth, whose “doughnut economics” model aims to build economic policies and metrics that put thriving ahead of growing. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit revkin.substack.com/subscribe
2021-07-26
1h 21
Sustain What?
Herman Daly and Kate Raworth on Pandemic-Resistant Economies
March 31, 2020 Join our special Earth Institute conversation with leading sustainability analysts from two generations rethinking how human progress should be pursued and measured. Herman E. Daly, a founding force behind “steady-state economics,” will examine possible paths to less fragile global systems with Kate Raworth, whose “doughnut economics” model aims to build economic policies and metrics that put thriving ahead of growing. SUSTAIN WHAT is a global conversation identifying solutions to the complicated, shape-shifting and epic challenges of humanity’s Anthropocene moment. A prime focus is making sense of, and getting the most out of, the pl...
2021-07-26
1h 21
COVIDCalls
#7 COVIDCalls 3.24.2020 - Disaster, Science, & Journalism w/ Andy Revkin
What are the challenges for journalists to report accurate information when there is a disconnect between science and politics? How do news consumers become discerning about the information they trust in the internet age? Andrew Revkin, a path-breaking environmental journalist and founding director of the Initiative on Communication Innovation and Impact at Columbia University's Earth Institute, discusses the role of journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic as well as how mitigation measures and virtual connectivity are reshaping the possibilities of journalism. Revkin discusses how the make-up and leadership of newsrooms can lead to everything being seen through the le...
2020-06-01
1h 05
Disaster Politics Podcast
Episode 21 - SUSTAIN WHAT: National Security in the Pandemic Age
In this cross-over episode, Andy Revkin (@Revkin), director of the Initiative on Communications and Sustainability at Columbia University’s (@Columbia) Earth Institute (@EarthInstitute) sits down with national security experts Geoff Dabelko (@geoffdabelko), Alice Hill (@Alice_C_Hill), and Rod Schoonover (@RodSchoonover) to talk about where we are at with COVID-19, and what are the National Security Implications of this unparalleled moment. Sustain What is a series of web chats with Andy Revkin with experts to talk about different aspects of sustainability and the challenges we face. This recording was done on Sunday 3/15/2020. See the video for this and other Sustain Wh...
2020-03-17
00 min
SEJ 2019 Conference
Storyteller to Mediator: A New Path for Solutions-Focused Journalists?
Speakers Andrew Revkin (Moderator) Columbia University Earth Institute Jill Baron (Speaker ) US Geological Survey Samantha McCann (Speaker ) Vice President, Solutions Journalism Network Camille Morse Nicholson (Speaker ) Program Manager, Rural Climate Dialogues, Jefferson Center Andrew Rockway (Speaker ) Program Director, Jefferson Center Description At a variety of institutions aiming to foster progress on tough issues, a shift is underway from telling a convincing story to shaping a better conversation. Should media follow suit? The idea: Rather than report on a meeting, hold the meeting — and another, and another, fostering trust and crosstalk and generating stories. This brainstorming Cr...
2019-11-27
1h 14
Future of Life Institute Podcast
Not Cool Ep 9: Andrew Revkin on climate communication, vulnerability, and information gaps
In her speech at Monday’s UN Climate Action Summit, Greta Thunberg told a roomful of global leaders, “The world is waking up.” Yet the science, as she noted, has been clear for decades. Why has this awakening taken so long, and what can we do now to help it along? On Episode 9 of Not Cool, Ariel is joined by Andy Revkin, acclaimed environmental journalist and founding director of the new Initiative on Communication and Sustainability at Columbia University’s Earth Institute. Andy discusses the information gaps that have left us vulnerable, the difficult conversations we need to be having, and the...
2019-09-26
36 min
Future of Life Institute Podcast
Not Cool Ep 9: Andrew Revkin on climate communication, vulnerability, and information gaps
In her speech at Monday’s UN Climate Action Summit, Greta Thunberg told a roomful of global leaders, “The world is waking up.” Yet the science, as she noted, has been clear for decades. Why has this awakening taken so long, and what can we do now to help it along? On Episode 9 of Not Cool, Ariel is joined by Andy Revkin, acclaimed environmental journalist and founding director of the new Initiative on Communication and Sustainability at Columbia University’s Earth Institute. Andy discusses the information gaps that have left us vulnerable, the difficult conversations we need to be having, and the...
2019-09-26
36 min
Warm Regards
How Citizens Climate Lobby Creates Green Solutions From Red and Blue
Ramesh Laungani, Sarah Myhre and Andy Revkin chat about Carbon Fees and also talk to Steve Valk with Citizens' Climate Lobby about work across all aisles on climate solutions. More on the Washington State Carbon Fee: https://ballotpedia.org/Washington_Initiative_1631,_Carbon_Emissions_Fee_Measure_(2018) Steve and CCL: https://citizensclimatelobby.org/author/steve/ Don't forget to subscribe to Warm Regards on Medium - medium.com/@ourwarmregards/ on iTunes - itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/warm-…d1127571287?mt=2 Soundcloud - @warmregardspodcast Stitcher - www.stitcher.com/podcast/stephen-…cey/warm-regards Twitter - twitter.com/ourwarmregards and Facebook - www.facebook.com/Warm...
2018-09-12
57 min
Spectrum
Award-winning Journalist Studies Today’s Climate Change by Looking at the Past
Andrew Revkin has spent his professional career covering environmental issues and writing about them contemporaneously. However, his most recent book, just published in May 2018, tracks climate change by looking at 100 historical events that help explain today’s climate debate. The book is “Weather: An Illustrated History: From Cloud Atlases to Climate Change” published by Sterling and it is co-authored by Revkin’s wife, Lisa Mechaley. He goes back to pre-history and brings the important climate events, people and milestones forward to our current political climate-change debate. Each short narrative section is accompanied by stunning illustrations. During h...
2018-05-02
48 min
Warm Regards
Diversity and climate with Kim Cobb
Host Andy Revkin chats with Georgia Tech's Kim Cobb about the importance of paleoclimate and what records of the earth and environment’s previous eons can tell us about where we are, where we’re headed and what can be done. Paleoclimate finally has a seat at the table in climate matters, which leads to a related discussion on the importance of diversity in the climate community. Find Kim on Twitter @CoralsnCaves https://twitter.com/coralsncaves Related links: http://pastglobalchanges.org -The chapter on Paleoclimate from the most recent IPCC report: https://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/c...
2018-03-07
43 min
Warm Regards
Talking to DOI Whistleblower Joel Clement
Andy Revkin is joined by Joel Clement, the Department of the Interior's whistleblower. Joel talks about his job at DOI, his resignation and "scathing letter", and his concern for Alaska's Indigenous communities. Find Joel on twitter at @jclement4maine Image courtesy of Tim Evanson: https://www.flickr.com/photos/timevanson/
2017-10-27
31 min
Warm Regards
Hurricane Harvey and Houston's Four Feet of Rain - Don't Call it an Anomaly (w/ Marshall Shepherd)
In this quick response episode, former American Meteorological Society President Marshall Shepherd joins Eric Holthaus and Andy Revkin to talk about the ongoing tragedy in Texas, what the unprecedented storm means for the future and how we think about extreme weather. More from Marshall: https://www.forbes.com/sites/marshallshepherd/ Donate to Harvey relief and Google will match your donation: https://www.google.org/harvey-relief/
2017-08-30
26 min
Warm Regards
There's No App for Climate Change: A Manifesto for Moving Forward
Jacquelyn Gill and Andy Revkin talk with Richard Heinberg of the Post Carbon Institute about the dangers of relying on technology to bail us out when it comes to climate change. We also hear the late Pete Seeger's thoughts on science. Links!: http://noapp4that.org/ More of Andy's conversation with Seeger on the Future and the Internet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTpkKt0B4SI&t=120s https://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/21/on-flu-strains-folkies-and-faith-in-science/?_r=0 Population scenarios: http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol28/39/28-39.pdf https://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/10/25/the-population-cluster-bomb/
2017-08-04
50 min
Warm Regards
Talking mammoths, timescales, and rewilding with "Welcome to Pleistocene Park" writer Ross Andersen
One of the most fascinating climate change stories of the year comes from Ross Anderson at The Atlantic. In "Welcome to Pleistocene Park", Ross writes about Pleistocene Park, a reserve in Siberia that aims to stave off climate change by attempting to recreate the conditions of the Pleistocene, turning the reserve into a grassland steppe ecosystem by importing large herbivores. The article also explores the possibilities of bringing back the woolly mammoth, specifically for a place like Pleistocene park. Read the full article at The Atlantic - https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/04/pleistocene-park/517779/ Ross Anderson joins hosts Jacquelyn Gill...
2017-04-10
39 min
Warm Regards
Science in a ‘post-fact’ world
We were expecting to take a longer break while preparing ourselves for 2017. But it’s clear we need to respond to the whirlwind first week of Donald Trump’s presidency –- specifically what it means for science and climate change. We’ll also spend some time on the emerging resistance movement in favor of science. In this week’s episode, we detail the different ways that the Trump Administration may be systematically undermining climate science. There are a lot of bad signs. But there’s still a lot we don’t know. We are now living in a country in which our head...
2017-02-01
50 min
America Adapts the Climate Change Podcast
Andy Revkin Podcast - a history of climate change journalism
Subscribe to America Adapts on Itunes Listen here. Now on Spotify! On Google Play here. To get a tease how our conversation went: DOUG PARSONS: Do you think the Scientist March is a good idea? ANDY REVKIN: No. ANDY REVKIN: People should visit Woodward County, West Virginia — the most climate skeptical county in the U.S. ANDY REVKIN: Nothing we can do right now will change the course of climate change for at least a decade. In the latest episode of America Adapts, Doug Parsons talks wit...
2017-01-31
58 min
Generation Anthropocene
The Biggest Stories
Andy Revkin is an award-winning journalist whose life work has centered on reporting about the environment and climate change. He spoke to producer Mike Osborne about his early seafaring adventures, how he got his start in journalism, and his view that climate change is a symptom of a much bigger story about our species coming of age on a finite planet. We also have a short bonus segment featuring David Biello, who has just published a new book about the Anthropocene titled “The Unnatural World: The Race to Remake Civilization in Earth's Newest Age.” Generation Anthropocene is supported by Stanford's Scho...
2016-12-15
38 min
Generation Anthropocene
Preparing For Paris
When the Conference of the Parties meets in Paris in the coming weeks, it will mark the 21st time the nations of the world have met to try to strike a deal to combat climate change. Given existing tensions between nations, and given that each country has a unique capacity to contribute to a comprehensive deal, we ask the question, "how can we measure success at the Paris negotiations?" Stanford researcher Aaron Strong and New York Time reporter Andy Revkin walk us through the history of previous negotiations to explore what went wrong, what we've learned, and why many are...
2015-11-25
14 min
Green Divas: Green Dude Stuff
Andrew Revkin on Pope Francis Encyclical
Got a chance to catch up with Andrew Revkin, NYTimes Dot Earth editor/contributor, who was a significant part of a meeting last year with Pope Francis, where the discussions were all about the topic of this latest encyclical about climate change, corporate greed and getting our act together as a species. That 4-day meeting was likely the basis for this encyclical and Andy has some great insights to share about it.
2015-06-18
11 min
The Green Divas
Green Dude Andrew Revkin on Pope Francis Encyclical
Got a chance to catch up with Andrew Revkin, NYTimes Dot Earth editor/contributor, who was a significant part of a meeting last year with Pope Francis, where the discussions were all about the topic of this latest encyclical about climate change, corporate greed and getting our act together as a species. That 4-day meeting was likely the basis for this encyclical and Andy has some great insights to share about it.Please check out our TikTok @official_greendivas ; of course follow us on instagram @TheGreenDivas ; FaceBook @GreenDivas
2015-06-18
11 min
SHINE ON - THE HEALTH AND HAPPINESS SHOW
A Very Fine Line: Life, Luck & Lessons with Andy Revkin
Andy Revkin is at home in New York's Hudson Valley and in every other corner of the earth. This award winning science and environmental writer who blogs for for the New York Times Opinion Pages is also a musician who shares the stage with people such as Pete Seeger. An unexpected stroke at a fairly young age gave Andy both pause and purpose. Telemedicine, bucket lists, inertia and human nature are some of the things we touch on here. Listen in and meet a man who makes our lives richer by examining his own. Andy Revkin also makes the world smaller by re...
2013-12-22
26 min
Climate One
Paul Hawken & Andy Revkin: Carbon Gift (10/18/13)
“Humans are problem-solving animals – you would never know it reading the press,” said environmentalist Paul Hawken. He and NY Times writer Andy Revkin discussed how attitudes have changed in the 25 years since NASA scientist James Hansen testified before Congress about human-caused climate change. “Right now, the attitude is that climate change is happening to us...instead of the idea that actually climate change is instead happening for us,” Hawken said. Some problems stem from lack of education, while others can be attributed to policies and mindsets. “It’s our social systems that impede progress,” Revkin said. “The technologies are there, to some extent, bu...
2013-10-23
1h 02
Underreported (The Leonard Lopate Show)
Underreported: Cancun Climate Change Talks
Global talks on climate change have been underway in Cancun, Mexico for days now. New York Times columnist Andy Revkin tells the latest on what’s happening and why expectations have been so low this year. Andy Revkin NY Times columnistAndy
2010-12-09
19 min
Underreported from WNYC's The Leonard Lopate Show
Underreported: Cancun Climate Change Talks
Global talks on climate change have been underway in Cancun, Mexico for days now. New York Times columnist Andy Revkin tells the latest on what’s happening and why expectations have been so low this year. Andy Revkin NY Times columnistAndy
2010-12-09
19 min
Point of Inquiry
Andrew Revkin - The Death of Science Writing, and the Future of Catastrophe
We live in a science centered age—a time of private spaceflight and personalized medicine, amid path-breaking advances in biotechnology and nanotechnology. And we face science centered risks: climate and energy crises, biological and nuclear terror threats, mega-disasters and global pandemics. So you would think science journalism would be booming—yet nothing could be further from the case. If you watch 5 hours of cable news today, expect to see just 1 minute devoted to science and technology. From 1989-2005, meanwhile, the number of major newspapers featuring weekly science sections shrank from 95 to 34. Epitom...
2010-03-12
33 min
Point of Inquiry
Andrew Revkin - The Death of Science Writing, and the Future of Catastrophe
We live in a science centered age—a time of private spaceflight and personalized medicine, amid path-breaking advances in biotechnology and nanotechnology. And we face science centered risks: climate and energy crises, biological and nuclear terror threats, mega-disasters and global pandemics. So you would think science journalism would be booming—yet nothing could be further from the case. If you watch 5 hours of cable news today, expect to see just 1 minute devoted to science and technology. From 1989-2005, meanwhile, the number of major newspapers featuring weekly science sections shrank from 95 to 34. Epitom...
2010-03-12
33 min
CUNY Institute For Sustainable Cities
CISC Speaker Series
Speaker:Andy Revkin Description:What made the location of a city desirable in the past was certainly based on accessibility to water. It is no coincidence that most large cities are--or were--port cities. But today, this same proximity to water is perhaps a cause for concern. We certainly have seen the consequences of such urbanization during both the Tsunami and of course Katrina. But what is the real potential threat of rising tides to New York City? Join the CUNY Institute for Sustainable Cities and Queens College in welcoming Andrew Revkin of The New York Times, in discussion with a...
2008-05-15
13 min